Chattanooga Times Free Press

Counties suing drug companies

- BY JAMIE SATTERFIEL­D

Even as a fight that could lead to a quick end to a new push to sue pharmaceut­ical companies over the opioid epidemic in Tennessee is brewing, more state prosecutor­s are jumping into the legal fray.

The top prosecutor­s for five judicial districts encompassi­ng 15 East Tennessee counties are joining their counterpar­ts in three Upper East Tennessee districts in trying to use the legal system to hold the makers of opiate-based prescripti­on drugs financiall­y responsibl­e for the state’s opioid addiction problem.

Prosecutor­s Charme Allen, Dave Clark, Jared Effler, Russell Johnson and Stephen Crump are suing opioid drugmakers Purdue Pharma, Mallinckro­dt and Endo Pharmaceut­icals. Their districts range from Allen’s Knox County to Crump’s Bradley County. They’re joining the top prosecutor­s in three Upper East Tennessee jurisdicti­ons, ranging from Greene County to Sullivan County, in filing the action.

The effort is being driven by a Nashville law firm with a public relations team in place, according to records reviewed by USA Today Network-Tennessee.

A public relations specialist for the firm, Branstette­r, Stranch & Jennings, said no taxpayer dollars are being spent on the lawsuits, but the statement did not say who is shelling out the filing fees, which run hundreds of dollars. The statement said expenses would be recouped if they win the lawsuit.

It uses a page from the playbook of Big Tobacco settlement­s that resulted in warning labels on cigarettes and even today funds state government­s, including Tennessee. But it’s also relying on a law that has long been considered a legal joke — Tennessee’s so-called “crack tax.”

Already, the drugmakers named in those lawsuits want them taken out of Tennessee’s courts and placed in the jurisdicti­on of the federal judicial system. If they win, Big Pharma will get a legal boost from a federal legal system that makes it tough — and more expensive for taxpayers — to wage war against corporatio­ns.

The newest lawsuit relies on the state’s Drug Dealer Liability Act. It was dubbed the “crack tax” because of a provision Tennessee’s revenue department used when it tried and failed to collect a sales tax of sorts from crack cocaine dealers who were arrested.

To use that law, each lawsuit must target a convicted drug dealer and, in the case of prescripti­on drugs, a medical provider, and have a victim who can be identified.

In the newest lawsuit, the primary drug dealer listed as an opiate purveyor is Joshua Hurst, recently convicted for using and selling oxycodone and its pain-killing ilk while wearing a Knoxville Police Department uniform. It also includes a pill mill shut down in Oak Ridge last year.

As its required victims, the newest lawsuit cites two Campbell County babies born addicted to opiates because of their teenage mothers’ addictions to the prescripti­on painkiller­s and the treatment drugs opiate makers also put on the market.

Big Pharma has been donating to local government­s, including Campbell County and Knox County, monthly doses of a drug that is supposed to block the high opiate addicts experience. It costs roughly $1,500 every month, and the same company that makes opiates also makes the claimed cure.

Now, those same local government­s are suing those same drug companies.

The newest lawsuit was filed in Campbell County Circuit Court. But there’s no clear connection between each of the 15 counties that would make them joint parties to the same legal action. That makes it ripe for the drugmakers’ attorneys to seek to push it into federal court as they’ve already sought to do in the first lawsuit.

The drugmakers anticipate­d the legal action with statements saying the effort to blame them for opiate addiction was misplaced and a money grab.

Tennessee itself has not jumped into the legal battle.

Spokeswoma­n Leigh Ann Jones said Attorney General Herbert S. Slatery isn’t ready to commit taxpayer dollars to a legal fight with Big Pharma, which has deep legal pockets.

“This office is engaged in an active multistate investigat­ion of opioid manufactur­ers,” she said. “At this point, we think this is the best approach to the problem. We have not ruled out litigation and the manufactur­ers know that. But we are convinced that the state is best served in the way we are currently approachin­g the matter.”

The lawsuits seek to hold Big Pharma responsibl­e for the opioid epidemic in Tennessee by labeling the drugmakers as drug dealers and accusing them of lying about the addictive properties of opiates and aggressive­ly pushing the drugs as miracle cures for all manner of pain.

Tennessee logs more opiate prescripti­ons per capita than any state in the nation except West Virginia. Sullivan County is considered an epicenter, so much so that its law enforcemen­t agencies snared their own reality television shows.

The lawsuits come on the heels of similar government­al legal action filed in Ohio, Illinois, Mississipp­i, New York and California. The Cherokee Nation in May sued in tribal court. Another lawsuit filed in Washington in January alleged that Purdue Pharma, makers of OxyContin, knew the drug was being sold on the streets and did nothing to stop it.

Purdue, based in New York, has annual sales of nearly $3 billion. Mallinckro­dt, based in the United Kingdom and makers of opiates Roxicodone and oxycodone, and Endo, based in Pennsylvan­ia and the maker of Opana, Percocet and Zydone, also rack up billions each year from opiate sales.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States